key: cord-0941203-xadi97w2 authors: Abu-Rumeileh, Samir; Abdelhak, Ahmed; Foschi, Matteo; Tumani, Hayrettin; Otto, Markus title: Guillain–Barré syndrome spectrum associated with COVID-19: an up-to-date systematic review of 73 cases date: 2020-08-25 journal: J Neurol DOI: 10.1007/s00415-020-10124-x sha: 8f817d4dce8b29e2f3ca03dd5861427dbaaaa53c doc_id: 941203 cord_uid: xadi97w2 Since coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) outbreak in January 2020, several pieces of evidence suggested an association between the spectrum of Guillain–Barré syndrome (GBS) and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2). Most findings were reported in the form of case reports or case series, whereas a comprehensive overview is still lacking. We conducted a systematic review and searched for all published cases until July 20th 2020. We included 73 patients reported in 52 publications. A broad age range was affected (mean 55, min 11–max 94 years) with male predominance (68.5%). Most patients showed respiratory and/or systemic symptoms, and developed GBS manifestations after COVID-19. However, asymptomatic cases for COVID-19 were also described. The distributions of clinical variants and electrophysiological subtypes resemble those of classic GBS, with a higher prevalence of the classic sensorimotor form and the acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, although rare variants like Miller Fisher syndrome were also reported. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) albuminocytological dissociation was present in around 71% cases, and CSF SARS-CoV-2 RNA was absent in all tested cases. More than 70% of patients showed a good prognosis, mostly after treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin. Patients with less favorable outcome were associated with a significantly older age in accordance with previous findings regarding both classic GBS and COVID-19. COVID-19-associated GBS seems to share most features of classic post-infectious GBS and possibly the same immune-mediated pathogenetic mechanisms. Nevertheless, more extensive epidemiological studies are needed to clarify these issues. Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has rapidly spread around the world from Jan-2020, with more than 14,000,000 cases confirmed so far [1] . Although primary affecting the respiratory system, central and peripheral neurological manifestations associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection have been increasingly reported [2] [3] [4] . In detail, several pieces of evidence suggested an association between SARS-CoV-2 infection and the development of Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) . GBS represents the most common cause of acute flaccid paralysis [57] . The classic form is an immune-mediated acute-onset demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy-AIDP) typically presenting with ascending weakness, loss of deep tendon reflexes, and sensory deficits. Diagnosis of GBS relies on the results of clinical, electrophysiological, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) examinations (classically albuminocytological dissociation) [57] [58] [59] . The clinical spectrum of GBS encompasses a classic sensorimotor form, Miller Fisher syndrome (MFS), bilateral facial palsy with paraesthesia, pure of diagnostic investigations, and outcome. If the GBS clinical variant [57] or the electrophysiological subtype [61] was not explicitly reported in the paper, we reconstructed it, when possible, from reported details. We also classified the diagnostic certainty of all cases according to the Brighton Criteria [66] . Searches were performed by SAR, AA, and MF. The selection of relevant articles was shared with all authors. For statistical analysis, we used IBM SPSS Statistics version 21 (IBM, Armonk, NY, USA). Based on the distribution of values, continuous data were expressed as mean ± standard deviation or as median and interquartile range (IQR). Depending on the number of groups and data distribution, we applied the t test, the Mann-Whitney U test or the Kruskal-Wallis test (followed by Dunn-Bonferroni post hoc test). All reported p values were adjusted for multiple comparisons. We adopted the Chi-square test for categorical variables. Differences were considered statistically significant at p < 0.05. For the present study, no authorization to an Ethics Committee was asked, because the original reports, nor this work, provided any personal information of the patients. Our literature search identified 101 papers, including 37 case reports, 12 case series, 3 reviews with case reports, 42 reviews, 4 letters, 1 original article, 1 point of view, and 1 brief report. Four and one patients were excluded from the analysis because of a missing laboratory-proven SARS-CoV-2 infection or an ambiguous GBS diagnosis [disease course resembling chronic inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy (CIDP)], respectively. A total of 52 studies were included in the final analysis (total patients = 73) . All data concerning the analyzed patients are reported in Table 1 . For one case [20] , most clinical and diagnostic details were not reported; therefore, many of our analyses were limited to 72 patients. To date, GBS cases (n = 73) were reported from all continents except Australia. In details, patients were originally from Italy (n = 20), Iran (n = 10), Spain (n = 9), USA (n = 8), United Kingdom (n = 5), France (n = 4), Switzerland (n = 4), Germany (n = 3), Austria (n = 1), Brazil (n = 1), Canada (n = 1), China (n = 1), India (n = 1), Morocco (n = 1), Saudi Arabia (n = 1), Sudan (n = 1), The Netherlands (n = 1), and Turkey (n = 1) ( Table 1 , Fig. 1 ). The mean age at onset was 55 ± 17 years (min 11-max 94), including four pediatric cases [21, 27, 35, 41] . A significative prevalence of men compared to women was noticed (50 vs. 23 cases: 68.5% vs. 31 .5%) with no significant difference in age at onset between men and women (mean: 55 ± 18 vs. 56 ± 16 years, p = 0.643). Comorbidities were variably reported with no prevalence of a particular disease. All reported GBS cases (n = 72) except two were symptomatic for COVID-19 with various severity. Most common manifestations of COVID-19 included fever (73.6%, 53/72), cough (72.2%, 52/72), dyspnea and/or pneumonia (63.8%, 46/72), hypo-/ageusia (22.2%, 16/72), hypo-/anosmia (20.8%, 15/72) , and diarrhea (18.1%, 13/72). One of the two asymptomatic subjects never developed fever, respiratory symptoms, or pneumonia [10] , whereas the other patient showed an asymptomatic pneumonia at chest computed tomography (CT) [12] . In all but six patients with available data [22, 24, 36, 44, 45, 52] , SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR with naso-or oropharyngeal swab or fecal exam was positive at first or following tests. Nevertheless, these six patients tested positive at SARS-CoV-2 serology. In four patients, the laboratory exam for the diagnostic confirmation was not specified [20, 40] . Typical "ground glass" aspects at chest-CT or similar findings at CT, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) or X-ray compatible with COVID-19 interstitial pneumonia were reported in 40 cases. The detailed therapies for COVID-19 are described in Table 1 . In all (n = 72) but four patients [10, 37, 40, 56] , GBS manifestations developed after those of COVID-19 [median (IQR): 14 (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) , min 2-max 33 days]. Differently, COVID-19 symptoms began concurrent in one case [37] , 1 day [40] and 8 days [55] after GBS onset in two other cases and never developed in another one [10] (Table 1) . Common clinical manifestations at onset included sensory symptoms (72.2%, 52/72) alone or in combination with paraparesis or tetraparesis (65.2%, 47/72, respectively). Cranial nerve involvement (e.g., facial, oculomotor nerves) was less frequently described at onset (16.7%, 12/72). Moreover, all cases but one [26] showed lower limbs or generalized areflexia, whereas in 37.5% (27/72) of the cases, gait ataxia was reported at onset or during the disease course. Even if ascending weakness evolving into flaccid tetraparesis (76.4%, 55/72) and spreading/persistence of sensory symptoms (84.7%, 61/72) represented the most common clinical evolutions, 50.0% (36/72) and 23 .6% (17/72) patients showed cranial nerve deficits and dysphagia, respectively, during disease course (Table 1) . Moreover, 36 .1% (26/72) of the patients developed respiratory symptoms, and some of them evolved to respiratory failure (Table 1) . Autonomic disturbances were rarely reported (16.7%, 12/72) . In cases with MFS/MFS-GBS overlap, areflexia, oculomotor disturbances, and ataxia were present in 100% (9/9), 66.7% (6/9) and 66.7% (6/9), respectively [8, 19, 23, 30, 32, 33, 43, 44] . The median of time to nadir was calculated in 40 patients with available data and resulted 4 days (IQR 3-9) ( Table 1) . Detailed electroneurography results were reported in 84.9% (62/73) of the cases. Specifically, 77.4% (48/62) cases showed a pattern compatible with a demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy. In contrast, axonal damage was prominent in 14.5% (9/62) . In a minority of the patients (8.1%), a mixed pattern was reported (5/62) . Regarding CSF analysis (full results were available in 59 out of 73 cases), the classical albuminocytological dissociation (cell count < 5/µl with elevated CSF proteins) was detected in 71.2% of the cases (42/59) with a median CSF protein of 100.0 mg/dl (min: 49, max: 317 mg/dl). Mild pleocytosis (i.e., cell count ≥ 5/µl), with a maximum cell count of 13/µl, was evident in 5/59 cases (8.5%). Furthermore, CSF SARS-CoV-2 RNA was undetectable in all tested patients (n = 31) ( Table 1) . Detailed blood haematological and biochemical examinations showed variably leucocytosis (n = 4), leucopenia (n = 17), thrombocytosis (n = 3), thrombocytopenia (n = 5), and increased levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) (n = 22), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (n = 4), d-Dimer (n = 5), fibrinogen (n = 3), ferritin (n = 3), LDH (n = 7), IL-6 (n = 4), IL-1 (n = 3), IL-8 (n = 3), and TNF-α (n = 3) (Table 1) . Furthermore, anti-GD1b and anti-GM1 antibodies were positive in one patient with MFS [23] and in one with classic sensorimotor GBS [13] , respectively, whereas 33 cases tested negative (one in equivocal range) for anti-ganglioside antibodies. Cranial and spinal MRI scans were performed in a minority of the patients (23/73, 31.5%). Five patients (three cases with AIDP [9, 12, 25] , one case with MFS [30] , and one case with bilateral facial palsy with paresthesia [52] ) showed cranial nerve contrast enhancement in the context of correspondent cranial nerve palsies. Moreover, brainstem leptomeningeal enhancement was described in two cases with AIDP, both with clinical cranial nerve involvement [18, 46] . On the other hand, spinal nerve roots and leptomeningeal enhancement were reported in eight [9, 27, 31, 36, 37, 42, 52] and two cases [17, 46] , respectively ( Table 1) . All cases with available therapy data (n = 70) except ten [13, 15, 23, 25, 26, 33, [35] [36] [37] 41] were treated with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) ( Table 1) . Conversely, plasma exchange and steroid therapy were performed in ten (four of them received also IVIG) and two cases, respectively. In two patients, no therapy was given. Mechanical or non-invasive ventilation was implemented in 21.4% (15/70) and 7.1% (5/70) patients due to worsening of GBS or COVID-19, respectively. At further observation (n = 68), 72.1% (49/68) patients demonstrated clinical improvement with partial or complete remission, 10.3% (7/68) cases showed no improvement, 11.8% (8/68) still required critical care treatment, and 5.8% (4/68) died (Table 1) . Interestingly, patients with no improvement or poor outcome (n = 19) showed a slightly higher (but not significant) frequency of clinical history and/or a radiological picture of COVID-19 pneumonia (14/19, 73.7%) compared to those with a favorable prognosis (29/48, 60.4%, p = 0.541). Moreover, the former group of patients was significantly older (mean 62.7 ± 17.8 years, p = 0.011), but with comparable distribution of sex (p = 0.622) and electrophysiological subtypes (p = 0.144) and similar latency between COVID-19 and GBS (p = 0.588) and nadir (p = 0.825), compared to the latter (mean age 51.8 ± 16.6 years). The same findings were confirmed even after excluding cases with no improvement from the analysis (to prevent a possible bias related to the short follow-up time). COVID-19 pandemic prompts all efforts for the early recognition and treatment of its manifestations. In analogy to other viruses, belonging or not to the coronavirus family [63, 67] , neurologic complications in COVID-19 are emerging as one of the most significant clinical chapters of this pandemic. In this regard, peripheral and central nervous system damage in COVID-19 has been postulated to be the consequence of two different mechanisms: 1) hematogenous (infection of endothelial cells or leucocytes) or trans-neuronal (via olfactory tract or other cranial nerves) dissemination to central nervous system in relation with viral neurotropism, and 2) abnormal immune-mediated response causing secondary neurological involvement [62, 68, 69] . The first mechanism is supposed to be responsible for the most common neurological symptoms developed by patients with COVID-19 (e.g., hypogeusia, hyposmia, headache, vertigo, and dizziness). In contrast, the second can lead to severe complications during or after the course of the illness, either dysimmune (e.g., myelitis, encephalitis, GBS) or induced by cytokine overproduction (hypercoagulable state and cerebrovascular events) [68, 69] . In the present systematic review, we reviewed clinical features, results of diagnostic investigations, and outcome in 73 cases of COVID-19-associated GBS spectrum . In the present study, mean age at onset in patients with GBS largely overlapped that of classic COVID-19 subjects [70, 71] . However, pediatric cases with GBS have been increasingly reported in the literature [21, 27, 35, 41] , suggesting that, with the spreading of the pandemic, a broader age range might be affected. Moreover, we found a higher prevalence of GBS in males compared to females, as previously reported for Zika virus-GBS [72] . This finding may also reflect the gender epidemiology of SARS-CoV-2. In this regard, males typically show a worse COVID-19 outcome compared to the females [70, 71] , possibly due to a generally shorter life expectancy or to higher circulating Angiotensin-Converting-Enzyme 2 (ACE2) levels, the cellular receptor for SARS-CoV-2, in the former compared to the latter [71] . Moreover, given that GBS is a rare disease [57] the epidemiological distribution of the reported cases seems to reflect current worldwide outbreaks, with Europe being the "hottest" spot in March-May 2020 and USA together with Asia in the following period [73, 74] . On another issue, despite a few GBS cases seemed to have a para-infectious profile [10, 37, 38, 40, 55, 56] as described for Zika virus [75] , all other reported patients developed neurological symptoms with a typical latency after COVID-19 (median time 14 days). This feature, together with the frequently reported negative nasopharyngeal swab at GBS onset [22, 24, 36, 44, 45, 52] and clinical improvement after IVIG therapy, seems to support Time to Nadir refers to days elapsed between the onset of neurological symptoms and the development of the worst clinical picture when no progression was reported nadir was considered concomitant with GBS symptoms onset b According to Brighton diagnostic criteria [66] GBS, the same finding was less frequently reported [84] . However, caution should be warranted in the interpretation of these results, given that MRI findings might have been underestimated, due to lack of a sufficient number of exams in the context of pandemic-imposed restrictions in the routine clinical setting. Regarding the distribution of GBS electrophysiological variants, our analysis showed that COVID-19-associated GBS manifests prevalently with AIDP and, to a lesser extent, with AMSAN and AMAN, in line with classic GBS in Western countries [66, 85] . Conversely, the observation of positive anti-GD1b antibodies in one COVID-19-related MFS patient and negative anti-ganglioside antibodies in other five cases appear in discordance with the high prevalence (≈ 90%) of anti-GQ1b antibodies among non-COVID-19 MFS cases [86] , and may suggest different immune-mediated mechanisms. However, these results could not be generalized until a wider population would be tested. In analogy to classic GBS, approximately one-fifth of COVID-19-associated GBS subjects required mechanical ventilation during hospitalisation [87] . In this regard, cases with no improvement or unfavorable outcome showed, in comparison to those with a good prognosis, an older age, confirming similar findings both in classic GBS [58, 88] and in COVID-19 [89] , and a slightly higher frequency (without reaching a statistical significance) of past or concurrent COVID-19 pneumonia. However, given the short follow-up time in most cases, we could not reach a definite conclusion on the impact of past or concurrent COVID-19 restrictive syndrome due to pneumonia on the prognosis of GBS patients. Future prospective studies are needed to clarify this issue. Moreover, given that also preceding diarrhea (mostly caused by Campylobacter Jejuni infection) is a strong negative prognostic factor in classic GBS [57, 88] , further prospective studies are needed to compare the severity of GBS related to COVID-19 to that associated with C. jejuni. Finally, in the context of respiratory failure and ventilation associated with COVID-19, the differential diagnosis should always take into consideration critical illness neuropathy and myopathy, which tend to develop later during the critical course [90] . Despite these findings, approximately one-third of COVID-19-related GBS patients showed no clinical and/ or radiological evidence of pneumonia, providing evidence that GBS may also develop in the context of a paucisymptomatic or even asymptomatic COVID-19. However, given that among the GBS population only two asymptomatic COVID-19 patients were reported to date, we may speculate that, in most cases, a certain degree of lung injury (even minimal) or at least hematic dissemination (e.g., fever underlying significant viral load) is necessary to trigger the immuno-mediated process through lymphocytic recognition of self-antigens or molecular mimicry. the notion of a prominent post-infectious immune-mediated mechanism. However, in this context, the massive release of cytokines in COVID-19 may also contribute to the amplification of the dysimmune process underlying GBS [76, 77] . In this regard, the increase of blood inflammatory markers (e.g., CRP, IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1, etc.) in GBS tested cases may reinforce the hypothesis of a systemic inflammatory storm in COVID-19 [76, 77] . However, given the limited data, we could not perform an accurate analysis of the distribution and, eventually, prognostic value of inflammatory markers in COVID-19-associated GBS. Moreover, we cannot exclude that in cases with GBS developing before or together with COVID-19 symptoms, the disease might have progressed sub-clinically in the early phase to manifest afterwards with its typical systemic clinical picture. Indeed, two cases [10, 12] , who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, never developed COVID-19 respiratory or systemic symptoms and one of them showed an asymptomatic pneumonia at chest-CT [12] . However, only more extensive epidemiological and translational studies, with the aim to compare the characteristics of GBS associated or not with COVID-19, could clarify these issues. In our population, most common clinical manifestations and distribution of clinical variants resemble those of classic GBS confirming the predominance of the sensorimotor syndrome compared to MFS and other rare variants [57] [58] [59] 66] . Similarly, the results of CSF analysis reflected typical neurochemical findings in non-COVID-19 GBS. In the latter, elevated CSF proteins and pleocytosis were described in about 50-80% [57, 78] and 11-15% cases, respectively [58, 79, 80] , largely overlapping with the percentages in our cohort. In this regard, the mostly normal cell count, together with the absence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in all tested CSF samples [6-9, 12-14, 16, 21-24, 31, 33, 36, 42, 44, 52, 55] , makes the possibility of a direct invasion from SARS-CoV-2 into the nerve roots with intrathecal viral replication less probable. However, a possible bias might rely on the lack of systematic data concerning the latency between symptom onset and CSF sampling in COVID-19 GBS cases. On another issue, in a further case of MFS associated with-COVID-19, who came to our attention, we observed the absence of intrathecal synthesis of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies together with a massive increase of CSF phosphorylated neurofilament heavy chain (pNfH) and serum neurofilament light chain (NfL) proteins, supporting the role of neurochemical markers as easily implementable tools for the detection of nervous system affection in COVID-19-related diseases [81, 82] . At variance with CSF findings, we found a discrepancy concerning MRI findings between classic GBS and COVID-19-related GBS. Specifically, while most cases of the former group showed typically spinal root enhancement at MRI [83] , in the latter group, in analogy with Zika-associated Major strengths of our review are the inclusion of a high number of patients, together with an in-depth analysis of the clinical and diagnostic features of COVID-19-associated GBS. We are aware that selection bias might have occurred, given that most reported cases to date have been described mostly in Europe (47 out of 73) and during COVID-19 highest spreading. Therefore, future extensive epidemiological studies are necessary to ascertain the nature of the association between COVID-19 and GBS (causal or coincidental). Moreover, we cannot exclude the possibility that at least some of the cases represent instances of CIDP, given the frequent absence of a follow-up longer than 2 months. On another issue, the low but possible evidence of an epidemiological link between vaccines and GBS development [57, 58] should aware the clinicians of the possible occurrence of GBS after COVID-19 vaccination in the long-term future. In conclusion, based on the systematic review of 73 cases, we showed that the clinical picture of COVID-19-associated GBS seems to resemble that of classic GBS or Zikaassociated GBS. Moreover, the chronological evolution, the response to IVIG, and the absence of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in CSF may suggest a prominent post-infectious immunemediated mechanism rather than a para-infectious one. Although most cases were symptomatic for COVID-19, the preliminary report of a few patients without respiratory or systemic symptoms raises a significant healthcare issue, namely the importance of SARS-CoV-2 testing in all patients with suspected GBS during the pandemic, with the aim to provide an eventual rapid case isolation. Nevertheless, only further analyses on more comprehensive cohorts could help in clarifying better all these issues. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creat iveco mmons .org/licen ses/by/4.0/. 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Conflicts of interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest related to the content of this article.Ethical standard For the present study, no authorization to an Ethics Committee was asked, because the original reports, nor this work, provided any personal information of the patients.